7/21/10

How it all began. . .

Today's blog post brought to you by another question from Iggy:

Did you study writing or is this all stuff that you have gleaned from experience (or, both)?
OR
"How I Began my Career as a Writer and then Diverged into Dabbling among Unrelated Professional Fields as well as Marriage, Motherhood, and Pet Care until I could See My Way Clear to place my Passion for Writing ahead of All Else except for The Hubster, The Kidlet, a Shaggy Dog, and The Zen of Swimming Pool Maintenance"


I was not born with a pen or keyboard in my hands, though I did write an article about Redbud Valley for the Girl Scouts when I was eight. That was all the writing I did for years, except required school work, until twenty years ago when I took a writing class at the local Junior College to get an international student ID--I went to Europe for my bro's French wedding and backpacked alone for a few weeks--and with that writing ‘experience’, I stopped writing for 12 years.


Fast forward, I was thirty-nine and just had my first, and only, kidlet and I wondered if I could write a book. Yes, I was like all those women with too much time on her hands. Of course, this was after I had taken 20 years of Bon Appétit magazine recipes and organized them into 13 binders.

I wrote the NEXT GREAT AMERICAN NOVEL! Yay!! Too bad I was the only one who thought it was good. I joined RWA (Romance Writers of America) and my local romance chapter RWI (Romance Writers Ink) and started the looong trudge up the learning curve.

DAMN! It was tough. I went to conferences, read numerous craft books (I’ll name favorites if pressed), and suffered through the red pens of some wonderful women who wanted to help me become a better writer. Though I must confess that it didn’t feel like they were helping at the time!

I didn’t ‘work my way up' to writing novels—I started out writing novels, most of which are under the bed. Each novel that I wrote taught me about writing—along with the numerous rejections that I’ve garnered over the years. I used get upset with ‘form’ rejections, but now, I just shrug off the personalized ones. If it isn’t for them, so be it, it isn’t for them.

I started judging writing contests, first, because as a member of RWI you had to judge their contests, and two, because I started enjoying it. Each contest that I judged taught me about myself as a writer, in that the problems I saw in other writer’s manuscripts I started to see in my own work.

I think I wrote my first short story (a murder mystery) in 2005—rejections ensued. My next story was my blog serial, Sugar Plum Disaster. Short stories are hard. You have very few words to engage the reader and tell a story. Recently, Janet Reid (an agent who I’d LOVE to have in my corner. They don’t call her a shark for nothing!) started a blog challenge by listing five words that must be used in a 100-word story. A hundred words, people! Now, that’s a challenge! Another blog, Evil Editor periodically does something similar, usually when he’s bored and issues a weekend challenge. I’m totally impressed with the talent out there. And no, I can’t do it on they fly like so many others can.

It doesn’t matter what you write when you start on the path. Short stories won’t make you a better novel writer, or vice versa. Writing will make you a better writer.

My one and only suggestion: Write what you are passionate about. That passion will infuse your story, AND THAT, will shine through.

To steal a phrase from Nike, “JUST DO IT”.

Write on!

4 comments:

  1. Write what you are passionate about. That passion will infuse your story, AND THAT, will shine through.

    I've seen that in contests, an entry with errors but the author's passion and voice shines through. When that happens, though I comment on the writing problems, I grade them higher and tell them how great I think their writing is. For me, that's the bottom line.

    Thanks for a peek into your life!

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  2. I love it when I see the passion in a newbie's contest entry, Edie. The other stuff can be fixed and learned, but the raw passion is something to be treasured.

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  3. Of all the people I've critiqued over the years, Margaret, you're among the top ones at learning. Even from the very beginning, you were determined to improve. There are so many people who get overwhelmed or realize it's not as easy as they thought and quit; it's the ones who keep striving and studying and learning who succeed.

    You've come a LONG way!I'm proud of you!

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  4. Thanks, Marilyn, but we must admit that I didn't have any where to go EXCEPT up the slippery slope! :-) Writing is hard and I don't think anyone realizes it until they get serious about improving their craft, then they realize how steep that damn hill really is!

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